Nubs70
Well-Known Member
Welcome YogiNobody drives in New York. There's too much traffic!
Welcome YogiNobody drives in New York. There's too much traffic!
This is all outrageous especially with the current product but I'm taken aback by the amount of people who have said in this thread "I'm glad I got my tickets yesterday" as they are complaining. You are already feeding the machine and have lost.
Thank you! Finally someone gets it.
Ooof. I had been poked by some attackers but now I've been stabbed by the great warrior. Just recently did I start posting but I've been reading your posts for the last 4 years and usually agree with what you say. But I guess not in this case.I mean this in the nicest way possible but please pull your head out of the sand. Con job from Disney aside, this will have almost no effect on redistributing WDW attendance. This is a pure money grab.
Those with the flexibility to travel during less busy times of year already do so.
All this increase does in punish young families without that flexibility.
This is a number that Disney has mentioned over the years at earnings calls. For example, at the 1Q2015 call, former CFO Jay Rasulo stated:What's the source on these #s? In my recent experience 20% seems significantly low.
IIRC, seasonal pricing already existed for the water parks.
Epcot on New Year's Eve felt ridiculously crowded a few years ago until the first fireworks show (7 PM) after that it felt like a normal crowded day.Your post reminded me of a recent experience.
In December 2015, I broke a decades-old self-pledge and took my family to WDW during Christmas for the first time. We wanted to say goodbye to Osborne's and ended up visiting 3 parks (avoiding the Magic Kingdom) on Christmas Eve, our only theme parks day. What struck my family was how the parks generally felt no more crowded than when we visited in late September, supposedly WDW's "slow" season.
The idea that WDW needs seasonal pricing at anywhere other than the Magic Kingdom is horse hockey.
I suppose, but, since they just announced a 3 billion dollar expansion... did anyone expect a reduction in prices? Also I'd just like to add that it was always punishing young families, not so much with it's ticket pricing, but, to the same degree that it does now. The tickets were cheap compared to the cost of getting there, staying there and food prices and general time restraints for younger people just starting a career. The cost of tickets were then and to a large degree still are the most affordable part of a Disney Vacation. Increases have out-priced the rise in salaries, but, not by much. However, the rest of the stuff is very much larger an increased then the price of admission. Tickets are the best deal in the place.I mean this in the nicest way possible but please pull your head out of the sand. Con job from Disney aside, this will have almost no effect on redistributing WDW attendance. This is a pure money grab.
Those with the flexibility to travel during less busy times of year already do so.
All this increase does in punish young families without that flexibility.
The cost of tickets were then and to a large degree still are the most affordable part of a Disney Vacation.
Attendance might not decrease much, but its a thing about Fatigue.I mean this to be nice as well; so Disney could raise prices HIGHER before a decrease in attendance? If there is still some price elasticity (of Demand) here, why don't they increase prices higher and capture it? Scared the outcry will be worse than it is now? Or are they looking NOT to edge out those who can barely make it down now?
And yet attendance still grows, and many on this thread are predicting no decrease with higher prices?? So Disney could raise prices more and really go for the $$$ grab, right?
Disney drives at peeps emotions.......if more people thought (instead of "felt") this price increase MIGHT drive down attendance. Sad thing is some of those who think Disney is just in it for $$$ don't seem to understand if price increase doesn't lead to attendance decrease, the price increase wasn't high enough...if this is just a money grab, right?
Just for the record, I too haven't been for years. The place is very, very expensive. The Canadian dollar took a dive so it's in reality about 40-50% more expensive for us than 2012.
I'm also frustrated that the price is outpacing investment and yet the crowds are higher than ever. Disney is being rewarded for being lazy and everyone making annual, biannual or quarterly visits and complaining about it are a large part of the problem. The public is just as much to blame as is Disney's general bad behaviour with capex projects at WDW.
Fortunately, there are other Disney park options worldwide, and non-Disney ones in Orlando.
lol, there are a few members who defend Disney explicitly because of that.What is absolutely crazy is that you as a consumer are defending Disney. If you work in thier finance department or are a major shareholder then why do you feel it necessary to defend the increases.
this image being relevant again!
Pretty sure that what Iger like in the office.
probably cupcakes or something as simple as that.I just can't help but wonder if Disney will release something tomorrow to get everyone talking about and that way we "forget" about the price increases.
Thats until they open the page and try to purchase tickets.So most of the public then.
What a boiled egg! D:Ooof. I had been poked by some attackers but now I've been stabbed by the great warrior. Just recently did I start posting but I've been reading your posts for the last 4 years and usually agree with what you say. But I guess not in this case.
First of all, I just need to make clear that under the current pricing, there will be no noticable crowd-level change because not enough people buy single-day tickets. My prediction of much more spread out crowds only applies to once all tickets are tiered.
I also said before that crowd level will be pretty much even across the three types of days. However, I now realize that it's too early to say that because it fully depends on how great of a price difference there is between each level. Obviously if the difference for a whole trip is just a few dollars, it's not going to change much. However, if the multi-day increases will be at a similar rate to these single-day ones, I expect significant change.
You say that this is purely a money grab, but I do not understand. Any more so than if they had just done a flat $8-10 increase? Maybe the $8-10 figure is off, but what I'm saying is that nobody has given a reason why a solid increase couldn't have had the same financial result for Disney. And I don't think tiered pricing is easier to market/sell people on. So why did they do this? What is the point of tiered pricing? How does it make more money? Heck, if you're going to charge some guests $124, why not just raise the price to $124 for every day of the year? I really am curious to hear what you think.
People's happiness is directly correlated to crowd levels. You've said that before and I agree. We've all seen what happens in long lines, especially boring ones in the heat. Children wine and cry, people get fiesty, or worse, they do stuff on their phones and take themselves away from an experience they're suposed to be enjoying. Side note, but that's why I think interactive queues are totally worth the expense. 2015 has seen record attendance at WDW but I would bet my house that it's seen a much greater meltdown record. All of what I mentioned above can taint a whole trip when it starts to add up. Attitude is also contagious so one meltdown could harm the experience of everyone aroud. So since crowd levels at WDW are higher than ever today and this fiesty behavior is also more common than ever, I have to think that somewhere, some logical brain realized that and this tiered increase is being done not only to make money, but also with the intention to spread out crowds to avoid this.
In the end, of course the goal is to make more money, but that's the goal of any price increase. This type of increase is better because it makes the customer happier, and that causes them to spend more money in the shops and be more inclined to return. The real solution to crowds is to actually expand the parks/resort, but since TWDC has been reluctant to spent the money to do that, this is their quick fix.
Of course that does not answer the topic of whether it will work or not. I've argued my point through and have very little left in my tank. Nobody has hit me with a solid reason why it won't work and I haven't given a totally solid reason why it will. I totally understand your reason of people only being able to go on peak days, and that's exactly the reason why the parks won't be empty despite the higher price. But I think seeing the price difference on their computer screen will either cause to force another another time to work, or, if their children are old enough, go to Universal. After all, Universal will be charging $19 less during these same peak times. Overall I feel like Disney can't possibly draw the same peak crowds under those circumstances. I respect everyone's opinions and am always open to new ones but I haven't heard anything convincing enough to change mine. I certainly don't feel like I'm going against such strong reasons that I have my head in the sand.
So I may be getting stabbed, but the sword is rather dull. Either that or I'm just not feeling the pain.
Sorry for the long post. This sums up most of my whole argument though, so my posts after this will be shorter.
Disagree.Epcot on New Year's Eve felt ridiculously crowded a few years ago until the first fireworks show (7 PM) after that it felt like a normal crowded day.
This is the way most other luxury industries work. Skiing, hotels, airlines, broadway plays, cruises, resort vacations. You'll have a better experience, less crowds and a cheaper overall price when crowds are lower. That's just the way these industries work. Theme parks were for some reason more the exception than the rule.
They are turning WDW into a luxury industry quite purposefully. Of course, the problem is that nothing actually changed in the interim from a quality standpoint (and in some ways got worse). I think most people agree with that.
Is WDW worth it? I guess that's for everyone here to decide. But they are quite unapologetically pricing people out of it. That's kind of the whole point though.
I don't get the general entitlement and outrage though. Send a message with your dollar by not going.
When I went during Christmas week this year, I realized I was actually getting more during that time though. There are fireworks, shows, and other entertainment that you can only see if you're there those specific days. There was always something going on right in front of me, surround the park fireworks, Santa Claus in the lobby of the resort, singing acts, special displays in the resorts, there's a lot more going on during those peak days that isn't offered on the non-peak days.
Why does everything have to be so complicated?! It's supposed to be a vacation for heavens sake!
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